The Jerusalem Post

Trump arrives in court in bid to delay Stormy Daniels hush-money case

- • By LUC COHEN

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Former US president Donald Trump arrived at the New York courthouse where his lawyers were to ask a judge on Monday to delay or dismiss his criminal trial on charges stemming from hush money paid to a porn star.

“This is a witch hunt. This is a hoax,” Trump told reporters before the cameras. “Thank you very much, everybody.” It was all he said before entering the courtroom.

His lawyers have argued that a delay was needed because prosecutor­s turned over thousands of pages of potential evidence about witness Michael Cohen only weeks ago.

Cohen, Trump’s onetime lawyer and fixer, made a $130,000 payment to silence adult film actress Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election about a sexual encounter she said they had a decade earlier – an encounter Trump denies.

Lawyers for Trump accuse Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office, which brought the criminal charges, of trying to bury documents that could help them challenge Cohen’s credibilit­y.

The documents came from the US Attorney’s Office in Manhattan, which previously investigat­ed the payment but did not charge Trump. Cohen testified that Trump had directed him to make the payment and went to prison after pleading guilty to violating campaign finance laws.

Trump’s trial was initially scheduled to start on Monday, but prosecutor­s consented to a 30-day delay to give Trump time to review the new documents. Trump’s defense is asking Justice Juan Merchan for another delay or for the charges to be thrown out altogether because of the late disclosure.

Merchan’s decision will set the course for what could be the first-ever criminal trial of a former president. Trump, the Republican candidate to challenge Democratic President Joe Biden in the November 5 election, has pleaded not guilty and called the case a politicall­y motivated “witch hunt.”

On Monday morning, Trump said the case should be dismissed.

“No crime,” he wrote on his Truth Social platform.

The case is one of several legal travails Trump, 77, faces as he ramps up his 2024 campaign. He faced a deadline on Monday to cover a $454 million civil fraud judgment for manipulati­ng the values of his real-estate holdings to dupe lenders, or risk having New York State seizing his properties.

He faces three other criminal cases, which focus on his efforts to overturn his 2020 loss to Biden and his handling of sensitive government documents after leaving office in 2021. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Trump has sought delays in most cases and successful­ly pushed back an early March start date to his federal trial in Washington, DC, over the 2020 election efforts as he pursued an appeal on presidenti­al immunity grounds. The US Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in that case on April 25.

He has also leveraged his criminal cases to try to raise money from supporters, as he lags Biden in fundraisin­g.

Prosecutor­s say the payoff to Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, was part of a broader “catch-and-kill” scheme Cohen and Trump hatched to boost his candidacy by buying the silence of people with damaging informatio­n.

Trump’s lawyers say the payment was meant to spare himself and his family embarrassm­ent – not to benefit his successful 2016 campaign.

Defense lawyers subpoenaed federal prosecutor­s for Cohen’s bank records and phone and email accounts in January, after Merchan denied their request to get some of those materials from Cohen himself.

“They sought to obstruct our efforts to collect evidence we are entitled to review and use in connection with our trial defense,” Trump’s lawyers wrote in a February 15 court filing, referring to the state prosecutor­s.

Prosecutor­s say no further delay is needed because most of the new documents are irrelevant to the case or are duplicates of material Trump already had.

Bragg’s office said it had asked the federal prosecutor­s for informatio­n from their case against Cohen and turned the materials over to the defense last June.

“Defendant has taken every possible step to evade accountabi­lity in this case,” prosecutor­s in Bragg’s office wrote in a March 21 court filing. “Enough is enough. These tactics by defendant and defense counsel should be stopped.”

 ?? (Mary Altaffer/Pool via Reuters) ?? FORMER US president Donald Trump leaves a pretrial hearing during a recess with his defense team on Monday in New York.
(Mary Altaffer/Pool via Reuters) FORMER US president Donald Trump leaves a pretrial hearing during a recess with his defense team on Monday in New York.

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